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Moozik

Poopalicious

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Dec 20, 2008 05:53 PM

As a summer intern for Rolling Stone, I quickly realized that my colleagues got their kicks from the small stuff: too often, I’d hear, “I got to get such-and-such editor a sandwich” or “Oh my god, that’s the tissue Bjork just sneezed into!” Granted, getting worked up over such minutiae is one of the best ways to network from the bottom of the totem pole: “Hey, Mr. Editor, remember me? I’m the guy that was channeling the Kabbalah to get the copy machine to work. Where are you going? It was a joke! I don’t even like Madonna!”

So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the RS interns take real pleasure in transcribing interviews of the stars they care about. Getting to listen to Q&As offers a brief taste of “being on the inside”: for a few hours, interns can pretend that they’re the magazine’s liaison to Jeff Bridges or Jack White. With one of my transcriptions, though, I got a real treat; something I can tell my grandkids about. I got to hear will.i.am take a shit

I can’t exactly prove this, but the clues were there: the signature echo, a couple of loud whirrs that sounded a lot like flushing (a courtesy flush the first time around, perhaps?), loud talking that faded in and out as if it was on the outside of a swinging bathroom door, and a bunch of shuffling immediately before and after each whirr. Half-an-hour into the interview, after one such flush-scramble, will said, “Can you ask me that question again so I can, uh, answer it?” Oh yes, it was an epic shit.

While typing will.i.am’s every word, I couldn’t help but ruminate on the endless possibilities: “Where is the Dump,” “Poopalicious,” “Yes We Can…Crap.” Maybe his straining had unexpectedly yielded another Fergie album? The task at hand became increasingly difficult as I slowly remembered that I had the sense of humor of a fifth grader. I simultaneously regretted and appreciated this fact.

Regardless, I finally had a way to answer my friends who kept asking me about all the “cool stuff” I was getting to do, expecting to hear about how, while touring with Kanye, I lost my virginity 18 times to Miley Cyrus and wrote a movie about it. Another man’s trash had turned into my treasure. If only Obama was cueing up a game of BattleShits in the next stall…

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Editor:
Jamie Berk is the Editor-in-Chief of The Dartmouth Independent. His first book, Making It: The New Landscape of the Music Business, is due out next summer.

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Writers:
Adam Boardman is the co-founder of Big Green Beats and a junior at Dartmouth.

Joseph Chapman is a freelance photographer and contributor to the UNC Daily Tarheel. His past interviews include Girl Talk, Chuck D, David Byrne, and Yes.

Sarah Grant is a freelance writer for publications like Rollingstone.com, Blurt, and Crawdaddy. She has interviewed the likes of Patti Smith, Les Paul, and Joe Perry.

Andrew Lohse is the Literary Editor of The Dartmouth Independent and co-editor of aposiopesis-!, TDI's literature, arts, and culture channel. He is the drummer for New Jersey-based pop-rock band The Horizontals.

Rahul Malik is a staff writer for The Dartmouth Independent.

David Mainiero is the Managing Editor of The Dartmouth Independent and editor of For The Love Of The Game, TDI's sports channel. 

Brian Patrick is a Staff Writer for The Dartmouth Independent and a Master of Liberal Arts student at Dartmouth, focusing on social movements and new media.

Liz Pelly is music director of Boston University's WTBU and a freelance writer for publications like Paste and CMJ.

Peter Stein is the film critic for The Dartmouth Independent, Director of The Dartmouth Independent Film Festival, and co-editor of aposiopesis-!, TDI's literature, arts, and culture channel.

Miles Suter is the co-founder of Big Green Beats and a junior at Dartmouth.

Kobi Tirey is a staff writer for The Dartmouth Independent. He is an outspoken critic of hipsters and Tokio Hotel.

John Vilanova is a contributor to Rolling Stone, Rollingstone.com, and GQ. He is a Research Editor at Niche Media.

Business Unusual, by Jamie Berk:
The music industry is backwards, bloated, and dying, leaving more than a few people wondering: what the hell happened? In 2009, TDI went to the industry’s annual rendezvous in Austin, Texas, to find out.

  • Tuesday, February 07, 2012
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